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Phew, IMF says no recession just a slow down!

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    Phew, IMF says no recession just a slow down!

    Article.

    Just a play on words or do they know what they are talking about?

    I guess they are basing their assessments on the true meaning of the word recession as opposed to world realities.

    #2
    Originally posted by Clippy View Post
    Article.

    Just a play on words or do they know what they are talking about?

    I guess they are basing their assessments on the true meaning of the word recession as opposed to world realities.
    If they said recession, I guess it would be self fulfilling?

    Trying to keep confidenvce up?

    Comment


      #3
      Originally posted by Clippy View Post
      Article.

      Just a play on words or do they know what they are talking about?

      I guess they are basing their assessments on the true meaning of the word recession as opposed to world realities.
      Are you stirring again?

      Comment


        #4
        Originally posted by AtW View Post
        Are you stirring again?
        Absolutely - have set my sights higher this time - aiming for a worldwide recession.

        Comment


          #5
          Recession ? Rubbish!

          Even the FT says were going to boom - now get out there get another mortagage - whie you are it why not be the first on your block to land a 2000 pound ticket for Pope Tonys next dinner speech in Basingstoke !

          Leading US companies are shifting into recession mode and preparing to cut costs, freeze hiring and reduce capital spending as they brace for an economic slowdown, senior executives and industry experts said.


          Their concerns are likely to be reinforced by the International Monetary Fund, which slashed its forecast for US growth and warned that no country would be completely immune from what it termed a “global slowdown”.

          .

          Business leaders say rising oil prices, sagging consumer confidence and the on-going credit crunch are prompting them to put in place contingency plans to protect against the expected economic downturn.

          “We have a number of levers we can pull in terms of capital and costs,” said Andrew Liveris, chief executive of Dow Chemical, which reported a halving in fourth-quarter earnings. “We have been buttoned down since July with a total clampdown on costs and capital expenditure.”

          Jim Owens, chief executive of Caterpillar, the world’s largest maker of construction equipment and a company regarded as a gauge of national economic health, last week warned of “anaemic growth in the US”.

          Multinationals are counting on growth in overseas demand and the weak dollar to offset domestic weakness.

          A leading US management consultant said that over the past few months, his firm had been “deluged” with calls from smaller, domestically-focused companies asking for advice on how to deal with a recession.

          “They all want to know what to cut and what to hold back if the economy hits the buffers,” he said.

          Chief financial officers polled by Financial Executives International, an association of financial executives, and The City University of New York’s Baruch College, reflected this negative mood about US economic prospects.

          In the last quarter of 2007, CFOs’ economic optimism touched its lowest level since June 2004, when the survey was first carried out, and recorded a 10 per cent fall over the previous three months.
          Last edited by AlfredJPruffock; 30 January 2008, 07:19.

          Comment


            #6
            Bankers, brokers and estate agents play the same game - keep the plebs enthused while the toffs sell up and slip out the back door.

            Hedge your bets... http://www.missilebases.com/

            Comment

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